THE
EVOLUTION OF A TCF CHAPTER
By David Gibson
From We Need Not Walk Alone®, Winter 2003 -2004
A year after our daughter died,
Peggy and I began attending a small TCF chapter in a town an hours drive away. That
chapter met on the first Sunday afternoon of each month. After we had attended their
meetings for about a year, the chapter leader urged us to start a TCF chapter in
The National Office was contacted, a chapter application made and with
the help of two other couples we discussed the where and when of chapter meetings. We
decided that we wanted to meet on Sunday afternoon so parents would not have to go out on
school nights and single mothers would not have to find sitters and drive across town at
night. Then, too, parents could drive in from distant townssome drive two hours
one-way and attend every chapter meeting. They can do that on Sunday afternoon while it
wouldnt be practical for a weeknight meeting.
We wanted to find a meeting place that was neutral. Many chapters meet
in churches but we felt that some might be reluctant to attend a meeting in a church. We
wanted to avoid meeting in a conference room of a hospital because that might be an
uncomfortable setting for some members. We contacted the president of a large centrally
located corporation, explained who we were and what we wanted to do and he gave us
permission to meet in the company cafeteria. Weve met there on the second Sunday
afternoon of each month since 1987 free of charge. Tables are moved, and chairs are formed
into a circle for the first hour, after which we break up into small sharing groups seated
at tables scattered around the cafeteria. It has worked out extremely well.
About eight months after starting the chapter, Peggy and I attended a
chapter leadership workshop in another state. One of the leaders there said their chapters
steering committee plans chapter programs a year in advance. A year in advance! That blew
my mind! And a steering committee? How do you form a steering committee? We were doing
everything ourselves!
We received information from the National Office on how to form a
steering committee. We learned not to ask for volunteers because we might get someone who
is not responsible. Rather we would select members who were responsible, willing to work
and far enough away from their own grief that they could help others. These individuals
were approached and asked to serve on the committee and asked to take some small
responsibility for just six months. Most accepted. We guessed that after six months they
wouldnt want to give up their jobs because they would discover that it is healing to
be able to help others. We were right. They wanted to keep helping. With a functioning
steering committee meeting every other month, even planning programs a year in advance was
easy. The committee simply listed the months of the year and brainstormed programs for
each month. Not a problem. The committee met at our house for supper after the chapter
meeting. Wed all chip in and bring in pizza or fried chicken, fellowship together,
talk about that days chapter meeting and discuss chapter business. This time
together strengthened the committee members resolve to keep the chapter strong and growing
in its outreach to the newly bereaved and to the community.
Five years passed and we were still chapter leaders. We knew that
was not healthy for the chapter. The chapter was entitled to a change. It needed new
leadership, new faces, new ideas, but each time we brought up in a steering committee
meeting the need for a change in chapter leadership, the committee would always say what a
great job we were doing. Any of those committee members was capable of being a chapter
leader. Each was picked for the committee because they could be a potential chapter
leader. But none of them would voluntarily accept that responsibility. Sound familiar?
In a workshop on leadership transition at a national conference
we learned one way to transfer chapter leadership. Not the best way, but an effective way.
So at the next steering committee meeting we told the group that as of the first of the
month three months in the future we would no longer be their chapter leaders. They would
have to pick someone from the committee. They had three months to do it. They were
astonished. They wanted to know if we were mad. No, we werent mad. Were we leaving
the chapter? No, we werent leaving the chapter; we were just leaving the chapter
leadership role to someone else. They knew we meant what we said so they got busy over the
next couple of weeks and at a subsequent meeting elected a new chapter leaderbut
this time something different was done.
This time the steering committee adopted some simple bylaws that
had been received from National which state that the chapter leader serves for two years
and that after the two year term, if they are willing and if the steering committee votes
to keep them, they can serve for two more years, but no more. Four years is the maximum.
A week or so after we had announced our resignation a member of
the steering committee called me at my office and asked to have lunch with me. We met, ate
lunch and finally he brought the subject up. He said, Ive been thinking about
your resignation from chapter leadership. Oh, I thought, here it comes; hes
going to blast me! Then he said, What you did was very unselfish. Yes, he got
it! I told him that now he really understood! I told him that people in the past would
tell us how we, as chapter leaders, saved their lives and that in the future
the newly bereaved parents would say that to the new chapter leader. She would be the one
theyd look to. They wouldnt know that we had ever had a leadership role in the
chapter and that was just fine with us. She would receive the love from the hurting hearts
she helped. And she did. She would receive the healing that comes from helping others. And
she did.
Leadership in our chapter has transitioned four times over
sixteen years. When a chapter leader is in their last year in office, the steering
committee knows it needs to start planning for leadership transition. And it does. The
transition has always been smooth and each one who has served as chapter leader was
thankful for the opportunity to do so. It has been so satisfying to us to see others
accept leadership responsibilities because they, too, want the chapter to be a vibrant
resource in our community for years to come.
In addition to being a chapter leader I have served as an RC, a
member of the National Board, given workshops at conferences and co-chaired a national
conference, but one of my most treasured moments of all of my TCF experiences was when I
gave up chapter leadership and that steering committee member said, What you did was
very unselfish.
David Gibson was chapter leader of the TCF Nashville, TN Chapter, a Regional Coordinator for Tennessee, a member of the National Board, has given workshops at conferences, and co -chaired the 1998 National TCF Conference held in Nashville.